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Efficacy and safety of corticosteroid treatment in community-acquired pneumonia

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dc.contributor.author Alazne, Elizabeth Rose
dc.contributor.author Toma, Cristina
dc.date.accessioned 2026-03-19T14:54:38Z
dc.date.available 2026-03-19T14:54:38Z
dc.date.issued 2026
dc.identifier.citation ALAZNE, Elizabeth Rose and Cristina TOMA. Efficacy and safety of corticosteroid treatment in community-acquired pneumonia. In: Medicina internă în tranziţie de la medicina bazată pe dovezi la medicina personalizată. Chişinău, 2026, p. 146-147. ISBN 978-9975-82-457-6. (Congresul aniversar „80 de ani de inovaţie în sănătate şi educaţie medicală”, 20-22 octombrie 2025: culegere de rezumate). en_US
dc.identifier.isbn 978-9975-82-457-6
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/32904
dc.description.abstract Background. Community‑acquired pneumonia (CAP) remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Adjunctive systemic corticosteroids (CS) have been proposed to dampen the host’s excessive inflammatory response, potentially accelerating recovery, but uncertainty persists regarding net clinical benefit. Objective(s). To evaluate, using current evidence, the efficacy of adjunctive corticosteroids treatment on key clinical outcomes and their safety profile in adults hospitalized with community‑acquired pneumonia. Materials and methods. Systematic PubMed, Embase and Cochrane search (2000‑2025) identified studies of CAP comparing CS plus antibiotics with antibiotics alone, using Keywords: corticosteroids, community‑acquired pneumonia, safety. Endpoints: mortality, clinical stability time, hospital stay, and adverse events findings were narratively synthesized. Results. Across 11 randomized trials (≈2,100 patients) and 8 meta‑analyses, adjunctive CS shortened time to the clinical stability by about 1–1.5 days and reduced hospital stay by roughly 1 day versus placebo. Mortality benefit was modest, becoming significant only in severe CAP or CRP > 150 mg/L (RR 0.72, 95 % CI 0.56‑0.93). Treatment failure, mechanical ventilation, and ICU admission showed favorable but heterogeneous reductions. Adverse events were dominated by transient hyperglycemia (number needed to harm ≈ 16); rates of gastrointestinal bleeding or secondary fungal/bacterial infection were not significantly increased. Conclusion(s). Adjunctive systemic corticosteroids seem to accelerate recovery and may lower mortality in severe or highly inflammatory CAP, at the cost of manageable hyperglycemia and no clear rise in major complications. Judicious, closely monitored use in selected in‑patients is warranted. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher CEP Medicina en_US
dc.relation.ispartof Medicina internă în tranziţie de la medicina bazată pe dovezi la medicina personalizată: Congresul aniversar „80 de ani de inovaţie în sănătate şi educaţie medicală”, 20-22 octombrie 2025: Culegere de rezumate en_US
dc.subject corticosteroids en_US
dc.subject community acquired pneumonia en_US
dc.subject safety en_US
dc.title Efficacy and safety of corticosteroid treatment in community-acquired pneumonia en_US
dc.type Other en_US


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